Zilia Sánchez
Zilia Sánchez
Cuban, born 1926
In 1962 she moved to New York, where she worked as an illustrator and designer while studying printmaking at Pratt Institute. In the mid-1960s she began working on her signature stretched canvases with projecting elements that recall the contours of breasts and other female body parts. While retaining ties with her family and friends in Cuba, Sánchez settled in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1972. There her abstract language, charged with erotic undertones, reached a monumental scale when she applied her designs to the facades of apartment buildings in Laguna Gardens in the mid-1970s. During this time she began contributing her designs to Zona Carga y Descarga, a short-lived publication featuring the works of such influential writers as the Cuban Severo Sarduy and the Argentine critic Marta Traba.
In the mid-1980s Sánchez started showing alongside other women artists as a member of the Asociación de Mujeres Artistas de Puerto Rico. In 1991 she began teaching at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas de San Juan. Throughout her life she has received important awards and accolades, the first in 1951, when she received first prize at the second Salón Romañach in Havana. Sánchez was twice presented with the Cintas Foundation Award (1966, 1968). The Asociación Internacional de Críticos de Arte Capítulo de Puerto Rico named the exhibition Zilia Sánchez, held at Artists Space in New York in 2014, the Best Exhibition of Puerto Rican Artists Abroad. Sánchez's paintings are housed in public collections such as the Museo de Arte, Puerto Rico; Ministerio de Educación in Havana; Instituto de Cultura Hispánica in Madrid; and Miami Dade College. Sánchez lives and works in San Juan.
—Marcela Guerrero
[Retrieved on 6/21/23 from https://hammer.ucla.edu/radical-women/artists/zilia-sanchez]
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